- Tu
quoque is a
discussion technique that
intends to
discredit the opponent's
argument by
attacking the opponent's own
personal behavior and
actions as...
- The tu
quoque defense (Latin for 'you too') ****erts that the
authority trying a
defendant has
committed the same
crimes of
which they are accused. It is...
-
argumentative point of view,
whataboutism is
considered a
variant of the tu-
quoque pattern (Latin 'you too', term for a counter-accusation),
which is a subtype...
- argument. Ad
hominem tu
quoque (literally 'you also') is a
response to an ad
hominem argument that
itself goes ad hominem. Tu
quoque appears as: A
makes a...
- Greene's Tu
Quoque, also
known as The City Gallant, is a
Jacobean era
stage play, a
comedy written by John Cooke. The play was a
major po****r success...
- to Shakespeare,
another well-known
version in
continental Europe is "Tu
quoque, fili mi?" (or "mi fili?" with the same meaning),
which is a more direct...
-
similar behaviour (rather than
acknowledging the
guilt of both) is the tu
quoque logical fallacy. The
earliest appearance of the
idiom is in
Thomas Shelton's...
-
Rhenum incolunt, quibus****
continenter bellum gerunt. Qua de
causa Helvetii quoque reliquos Gallos virtute praecedunt, quod fere
cotidianis proeliis **** Germanis...
-
Apophenia Equivocation False balance False analogy List of
fallacies Tu
quoque Whataboutism Wronger than
wrong Phillips, Harry; Bostian,
Patricia (2014)...
-
informal fallacies.
Argumentum ergo
decedo is
directly related to the tu
quoque fallacy when
responding to
political criticism. As
whataboutism is used...